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Would it be news if Microsoft paid vendors $450 less per month than company B? Now, wouldn't it be even less news if vendors took this into account and adjusted their fees upwards by $450? This is just an accounting trick that probably has no real world impact on the vendors.

I've worked in companies where every project was required to pay internal IT dept bills for services rendered, so what?

This is an accounting mechanism that forces projects to account for all costs Bourne by the corporation in support of the project. I suspect internal projects are also billed at an equal amount, but the bills remain internal.

It helps facilities lose the stigma of being a cost to the organization and instead it is funded by the internal groups that consume their resources.

At $450/540 a month, that's a pretty good rate for a piece of real estate, a desk, unmetered power and Internet access... Can I feta desk in MS office space for the same price? I currently rent a small 240 sq ft office for my work and it runs $525 for the space, plus utilities & ISP costs - $540/month all-in in an MS facility sounds good to me.

OK, so you have a worker occupying workspace, using power, air conditioning, network/wifi, phones, insurance liability...all the trappings of a typical office worker in any typical company anywhere. Except they're not working for Microsoft. So, to recoup these costs, Microsoft charges them rent. And this is a problem...why?

The only thing unusual here is that/. thought this was story-worthy. And $25M is a pittance compared to the company's bottom line so it's not like they're making out like bandits here.

It seems to me that Slashdot (or Dice Holdings) is bothered when Microsoft makes money, whether it be through their products or anything else. And the references to the movie Office Space are off-topic.

When people aren't having to drive to work they aren't putting load on infrastructure (roads, buses etc) at the same time as everyone else. That means they create less pollution than someone that has to drive to work. A person that doesn't contribute to traffic and likewise doesn't make that contribution to pollution is better for the community than the person that does. The greenest commute is the one you don't have to make.

I previously worked for a fortune 25 company that had one third of it's work force telecommute from home. They estimated that the cost of providing office space to tens of thousands of employees were well over a billion dollars a year. They also were able to claim credit for green savings for the environment in different manners (the greenest office building is the one you don't have to build).

They also had the benefit of being able to use the flexibility of telecommuting as a competitive advantage when hiring and retaining employees. They were also better able to monitor the employees that telecommuted than the ones in the office and so they were more productive. Yahoo's problem was strictly one of management failure, not one of telecommuting failure.

Wow, if that included an Office license of every workstation, we would actually save money by moving in with Microsoft. Those damn licenses costs us an arm and a leg. Every month, until you are out of limbs.